Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Binaural interaction of bone-conducted auditory brainstem responses in children with congenital atresia of the external auditory canal.

Bilateral bone-conducted auditory brainstem responses (BC-ABRs) were recorded in children with atresia of the external auditory canal bilaterally (AECB) in order to compare the response characteristics to normal hearing adults. The binaural interaction component (BIC) of the ABR occurs when the sum of the monaural-evoked ABR amplitudes are different in amplitude when compared to the binaural-evoked ABR amplitude. Previous electrophysiological work from our lab has shown that children with AECB lateralize bone-conducted (BC) sound. Furthermore, we have found in normal-hearing adults that BICs exist using BC clicks. In adults, BC-BIC occurred in the latency region corresponding to waves IV-VI, whereas for children with AECB corresponding peak latencies occurred earlier. Same as normal-hearing adults, BC-ABR IV-V complex peak amplitudes for sum of the BC-monaural right and BC-monaural left ears were different from binaural response amplitude. Individual peak latencies were similar in children with AECB when compared to normal-hearing adults except for shorter latencies for BIC. These results indicate that: (1) BC-BI is present in children with AECB as well as normal-hearing adults; (2) the gross response properties of BIC are similar in children with AECB and normal-hearing adults; (3) fitting of a bilateral BC hearing aid might be a feasible method to optimize binaural hearing and sound lateralization.

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